It’d essentially be what it’d sound like. There have a few posts in the last couple months about how EA has become less accessible and welcoming to newcomers as it has become a bigger and more complicated movement in the last few years. It’s a growing concern, so this seems like an obvious way to start remedying the problem. Here are some ideas that come to mind as possibilities:
A sequence could be something like an index, lexicon or glossary of EA.
Bringing concepts together so people new to EA can understand it in a systemic, methodical and coherent way by citing existing EA Forum posts or wiki articles could work and wouldn’t be hard to do.
There are more EA courses but short(er) reviews or summaries of courses and/or their content could be worthwhile.
Posts that serve the role of a Cliff Notes for various books authored by people in EA.
I’d also like to hear about alternative ideas or also any concerns/thoughts that this is a bad idea, or something else should be done instead.
[Question] Who Want to Collaborate on an Effective Altruism for Dummies Sequence?
It’d essentially be what it’d sound like. There have a few posts in the last couple months about how EA has become less accessible and welcoming to newcomers as it has become a bigger and more complicated movement in the last few years. It’s a growing concern, so this seems like an obvious way to start remedying the problem. Here are some ideas that come to mind as possibilities:
A sequence could be something like an index, lexicon or glossary of EA.
Bringing concepts together so people new to EA can understand it in a systemic, methodical and coherent way by citing existing EA Forum posts or wiki articles could work and wouldn’t be hard to do.
There are more EA courses but short(er) reviews or summaries of courses and/or their content could be worthwhile.
Posts that serve the role of a Cliff Notes for various books authored by people in EA.
I’d also like to hear about alternative ideas or also any concerns/thoughts that this is a bad idea, or something else should be done instead.